BERKMAN BUZZ: A look at the past week's online Berkman conversations. If you'd like to receive this by email, sign up here.
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*David Weinberger suggests using the Internet to create a more intimate democracy
*Dan Gillmor, on TPMCafe, looks at the media's role in the financial crisis
*Doc Searls provides a batch of reviews for the new WhiteHouse.gov
*danah boyd explores technology's power to help the sick...in a surprising way
*Digital Natives intern Sarah Zhang discusses watching history online
*The Publius Project returns with a new look and an essay from Ethan Zuckerman: "The Polyglot Internet"
*Weekly
Global Voices: "African Blogosphere On Obama's Inauguration"
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"Nicholas Lemann has a terrific piece in the Jan. 26 New Yorker that
says that personal characteristics are not enough to make someone a
great president. To achieve that status, Obama “has to create
institutions that will outlast him.' His examples are the United
Nations, NATO, and social “legislation and regulation that affect very
large numers of people and are built to last politically and
economically…' One could certainly point to health care as possibly
being of that status, especially if Daschle steps up the game so that
it’s more than reform ‘n’ extend. It’s also possible that building a
new world role for America could put Obama in the Hall of Great
Presidents even if no official institutions come out of it. Likewise if
his action on global warming and all around greenness changes not just
our policies but our assumptions…"
From David Weinberger's blog post, "Intimate democracy"
"Our government's current operating principle seems to be bailing out
people who were culpable in the financial meltdown. If so, journalists
are surely entitled to billions of dollars. Why? Journalists were
grossly deficient when it came to covering the reckless behavior,
sleaze and willful ignorance of fundamental economics, much of which
was reasonably obvious to anyone who was paying attention, that
inflated the housing and credit bubbles of the past decade. Their
frequent cheerleading for bad practices -- and near-total failure to
warn us, repeatedly and relentlessly, of what was building -- made a
bad situation worse..."
From Dan Gillmor's blog post for TPMCafe, "The Media's Role In The Financial Crisis"
"The Columbia Journalism Review whines, 'WhiteHouse.gov presents itself
as a kind of social networking portal in which citizens can essentially
“friend” the government–and it frames the ensuing dialogue as one that
takes place directly between the people and the government. The press,
it suggests by way of omission, need not be part of the exchange. One
hopes–hey, one even dares to assume–that the conspicuous absence of the
press from Obama’s transparency agenda is due to his conclusion that
the democratic vitality of the Fourth Estate is so obvious as to render
explanation or elucidation of that fact unnecessary...'"
From Doc Searls' blog post, "Pressing for respect"
"Yesterday, I received an email about one person's Facebook usage that
I felt the urge to share: 'A little over 6 months ago, my stepmom was
diagnosed with ovarian cancer. She is doing alright now, but during her
chemotherapy she was isolated from friends and family due to a
compromised immune system. She could still see people, but had to keep
human interactions to a minimum. During that time, Facebook became this
way for her to communicate and interact with the world. Being able to
see pictures of friends and family and receiving comments would
brighten her day. It was really amazing how she was able to adopt this
technology temporarily and how valuable it became to her...'"
From danah boy's blog post, "using Facebook while ill"
"On Tuesday morning at 11:45, I ran out of my last final exam and
plopped myself down in front of the nearest screen, determined not to
miss a moment of Barack Obama’s inauguration. Televisions are harder to
find around campus these days, but all I needed was a laptop with
Internet access, and nearly everyone in the dining hall was congregated
around one or another. I was only one of millions who found themselves
in front of a computer rather than a TV (or in DC in person.) According
to Akamai, who handles one-fifth of the world’s Internet traffic,
Obama’s inauguration set a new record in the number of simultaneous
data streams, which mostly carry live video..."
From the Digital Natives Project blog post, "Inauguration Day Online"
"The first wave of the Internet revolution changed expectations about
the availability of information. Information that was stored in
libraries, locked in government vaults or available only to subscribers
was suddenly accessible to anyone with an internet connection. A second
wave has changed expectations about who creates information online.
Tens of millions of people are contributing content to the modern
Internet, publishing photos, videos and blogposts to a global
audience..."
From Ethan Zuckerman's Publius essay, originally prepared for the World Economic Forum Global Agenda Council, "The Polyglot Internet"
"'It is done. I knew
it would come, but, oh, what a feeling! Yes, Mr. President, it is done,
indeed!' These words from Kenyan blogger Whispering Inn sum up the
emotional responses of most bloggers in the African blogosphere to the
historic inauguration ceremony of Barack Obama as the 44th President of
the United States of America. While the world was watching Obama, Rob
was watching Kenyans as they were celebrating 'the second coming' with
beer. Rob is a freelance journalist writing about Africa for The Times,
The Irish Times, The Daily Mail, The Scotsman and The Christian Science
Monitor from Nairobi..."
From Ndesanjo Macha's blog post for Global Voices, "African Blogosphere On Obama's Inauguration"
Last updated January 23, 2009